Popular on TelAve
- Althea Gibson Honored as Final Release in U.S. Mint's American Women Quarters Program - 173
- Cyntexa Announces Updates to ChargeOn on Salesforce AppExchange
- Oklahoma and Starlink Local Installers getting it done! / now offering digital menu board installs
- Starlink Local Installers working with state of Minnesota (now offering digital menu board installs)
- How California Convinces Buyers Not to Purchase New Cars — and How This Hurts Dealers
- Kudosity appoints Jules Holden to drive channel growth and expand offering in ecommerce and retail
- Own 327 Acres of American Prime Real Estate with 2 Miles Waterfront Worth In Millions for Just $7 — Worldwide Raffle Launched
- Nebraska and Starlink Local Installers working together for reliable internet
- Lineus Medical Receives Patent for SafeBreak® Vascular Generation 2
- Starlink Local Installers helping Wisconsin stay wired (now offering digital menu board installs)
Similar on TelAve
- Psychiatric Drug Damage Ignored for Decades; CCHR Demands Federal Action
- Women's Everyday Safety Is Changing - The Blue Luna Shows How
- Artificial Intelligence Leader Releases Children's Book on Veterans Day
- CCHR Documentary Probes Growing Evidence Linking Psychiatric Drugs to Violence
- Terizza Forms Strategic Collaboration with UC San Diego to Pioneer Next-Generation Distributed AI Infrastructure
- Coalition and CCHR Call on FDA to Review Electroshock Device and Consider a Ban
- Smile! Dental Center Named 2025 "Best Dentist" in North Pittsburgh, Celebrating High-Tech Care and Heartfelt Service
- Lineus Medical Receives Patent for SafeBreak® Vascular Generation 2
- CCHR's New Documentary Prescription for Violence Highlights Overlooked Safety Warnings
- Stratum Nutrition's OVOLUX™ Named 2025 "Collagen Ingredient of the Year" by Beauty Innovation Awards
Massively parallel implementation of nonlinear functions using an optical processor
TelAve News/10880568
LOS ANGELES - TelAve -- Researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) have developed an optical computing framework that performs large-scale nonlinear computations using linear materials. Reported in eLight, a journal of the Springer Open, the study demonstrates that diffractive optical processors—thin, passive material structures composed of phase-only layers—can compute numerous nonlinear functions simultaneously, executed rapidly at extreme parallelism and spatial density, bound by the diffraction limit of light.
Nonlinear operations underpin nearly all modern information-processing tasks, from machine learning and pattern recognition to general-purpose computing. Yet, implementing such operations optically has remained a challenge, as most nonlinear optical effects are weak, power-hungry, or slow. The UCLA team demonstrated universal nonlinear function approximation using linear optical materials by encoding input variables of nonlinear functions into the phase of an optical wavefront and then processing them through an optimized, static diffractive optical architecture made entirely of linear materials. Each diffraction-limited output pixel corresponds to a unique nonlinear function, enabling extreme parallelism within a compact, passive optical system.
More on TelAve News
UCLA researchers established theoretical and empirical proofs that these diffractive processors act as universal nonlinear function approximators—capable of realizing any arbitrary set of bandlimited nonlinear functions, including multi-variate and complex-valued functions that are all-optically cascadable. They also reported the successful approximation of typical nonlinear activation functions commonly used in digital neural networks, including sigmoid, tanh, ReLU (rectified linear unit), and softplus functions.
The researchers further demonstrated, through numerical simulations, the parallel computation of one million distinct nonlinear functions, accurately executed at wavelength-scale spatial density at the output plane of an optimized, static diffractive optical processor. They also reported an experimental validation of their architecture using a compact optical setup comprising a spatial light modulator and an image sensor, which successfully learned and executed tens of distinct nonlinear functions simultaneously.
More on TelAve News
The study's framework is scalable to much larger systems by leveraging high-end image sensors with hundreds of megapixels to potentially compute hundreds of millions of nonlinear functions – all in parallel. Such a capability could advance ultrafast analog computing, neuromorphic photonics, and high-throughput optical signal processing—achieved without nonlinear optical materials or electronic post-processing.
The authors of this work are Dr. Md Sadman Sakib Rahman, Yuhang Li, Xilin Yang, Dr. Shiqi Chen, and Professor Aydogan Ozcan, all at the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering. This research was supported by the US Department of Energy Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Materials Sciences and Engineering Division. Dr. Ozcan is also an Associate Director of the California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI).
Link: https://elight.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s43593-025-00113-w
Nonlinear operations underpin nearly all modern information-processing tasks, from machine learning and pattern recognition to general-purpose computing. Yet, implementing such operations optically has remained a challenge, as most nonlinear optical effects are weak, power-hungry, or slow. The UCLA team demonstrated universal nonlinear function approximation using linear optical materials by encoding input variables of nonlinear functions into the phase of an optical wavefront and then processing them through an optimized, static diffractive optical architecture made entirely of linear materials. Each diffraction-limited output pixel corresponds to a unique nonlinear function, enabling extreme parallelism within a compact, passive optical system.
More on TelAve News
- Nextvisit Co-Founder Ryan Yannelli Identifies Six Critical Factors for Behavioral Health Providers Evaluating AI Scribes in 2026
- CredHub and Real Property Management Join Forces to Empower Franchise Owners with Rental Payment Credit Reporting Solutions
- Leimert Park Announces Weeklong Kwanzaa Festival & Kwanzaa Parade Celebrating Black History, Culture, and Community
- Renowned Alternative Medicine Specialist Dr. Sebi and His African Bio Mineral Balance Therapy Are the Focus of New Book
- Psychiatric Drug Damage Ignored for Decades; CCHR Demands Federal Action
UCLA researchers established theoretical and empirical proofs that these diffractive processors act as universal nonlinear function approximators—capable of realizing any arbitrary set of bandlimited nonlinear functions, including multi-variate and complex-valued functions that are all-optically cascadable. They also reported the successful approximation of typical nonlinear activation functions commonly used in digital neural networks, including sigmoid, tanh, ReLU (rectified linear unit), and softplus functions.
The researchers further demonstrated, through numerical simulations, the parallel computation of one million distinct nonlinear functions, accurately executed at wavelength-scale spatial density at the output plane of an optimized, static diffractive optical processor. They also reported an experimental validation of their architecture using a compact optical setup comprising a spatial light modulator and an image sensor, which successfully learned and executed tens of distinct nonlinear functions simultaneously.
More on TelAve News
- Why Millions Are Losing Sexual Sensation, And Why It's Not Age, Hormones, or Desire
- Justin Jeansonne An Emerging Country Singer-Songwriter Music Fans Have Been Waiting For…a True Maverick
- Russellville Huntington Learning Center Expands Access to Literacy Support; Approved Provider Under Arkansas Department of Education
- UK Financial Ltd Launches U.S. Operations Following Delaware Approval
- Pinealage: the app that turns strangers into meditation companions — in crowdfunding phase
The study's framework is scalable to much larger systems by leveraging high-end image sensors with hundreds of megapixels to potentially compute hundreds of millions of nonlinear functions – all in parallel. Such a capability could advance ultrafast analog computing, neuromorphic photonics, and high-throughput optical signal processing—achieved without nonlinear optical materials or electronic post-processing.
The authors of this work are Dr. Md Sadman Sakib Rahman, Yuhang Li, Xilin Yang, Dr. Shiqi Chen, and Professor Aydogan Ozcan, all at the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering. This research was supported by the US Department of Energy Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Materials Sciences and Engineering Division. Dr. Ozcan is also an Associate Director of the California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI).
Link: https://elight.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s43593-025-00113-w
Source: ucla ita
0 Comments
Latest on TelAve News
- A New Soul Album: Heart Of Kwanzaa, 7-Day Celebration
- Allegiant Management Group Named 2025 Market Leader in Orlando by PropertyManagement.com
- NAFMNP Awarded USDA Cooperative Agreement to Continue MarketLink Program Under FFAB
- Costa Oil - 10 Minute Oil Change Surpasses 70 Locations with Construction of San Antonio, TX Stores — Eyes Growth Via Acquisition or Being Acquired
- LaTerra and Respark Under Contract with AIMCO to Acquire a $455M, 7-Property Chicago Multifamily Portfolio
- Record Revenue, Tax Tailwinds, and AI-Driven Scale: Why Off The Hook YS Inc. Is Emerging as a Standout in the $57 Billion U.S. Marine Market
- VSee Health (N A S D A Q: VSEE) Secures $6.0M At-Market Investment, Accelerates Expansion as Revenues Surge
- Children Rising Appoints Marshelle A. Wilburn as New Executive Director
- Fairmint CEO Joris Delanoue Elected General Director of the Canton Foundation
- Sleep Basil Mattress Co.'s Debuts New Home Page Showcasing Performance Sleep Solutions for Active Denver Lifestyles
- Bent Danholm Joins The American Dream TV as Central Florida Host
- The Nature of Miracles Celebrates 20th Anniversary Third Edition Published by DreamMakers Enterprises LLC
- Artificial Intelligence Leader Releases Children's Book on Veterans Day
- Felicia Allen Hits #1 Posthumously with "Christmas Means Worship"
- CCHR Documentary Probes Growing Evidence Linking Psychiatric Drugs to Violence
- Creative Investment Research Warns AT&T Rollback Undermines Market Integrity
- TimelyBill at ITEXPO 2026: Modern Billing for Modern Telecom
- Tokenized Real-World Assets: Iguabit Brings Institutional Investment Opportunities to Brazil
- MEX Finance meluncurkan platform keuangan berbasis riset yang berfokus pada data, logika, dan efisiensi pengambilan keputusan investasi
- From MelaMed Wellness to Calmly Rooted: A New Chapter in Functional Wellness